Janelle Wagnild j.m.wagnild@durham.ac.uk
Honorary Fellow
Janelle Wagnild j.m.wagnild@durham.ac.uk
Honorary Fellow
Samuel Asiedu Owusu
Simon Mariwah
Victor I Kolo
Ahmed Vandi
Didacus Bambaiha Namanya
Rutendo Kuwana
Babatunde Jayeola
Vigil Prah-Ashun
Moji Christianah Adeyeye
James Komeh
David Nahamya
Professor Kate Hampshire k.r.hampshire@durham.ac.uk
Professor
Substandard and falsified (SF) medical products are a serious health and economic concern that disproportionately impact low- and middle-income countries and marginalized groups. Public education campaigns are demand-side interventions that may reduce risk of SF exposure, but the effectiveness of such campaigns, and their likelihood of benefitting everybody, is unclear. Nationwide pilot risk communication campaigns, involving multiple media, were deployed in Ghana, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Uganda in 2020-2021. Focus group discussions (n=73 FGDs with n=611 total participants) and key informant interviews (n=80 individual interviews and n=4 group interviews with n=111 total informants) were conducted within each of the four countries to ascertain the reach and effectiveness of the campaign. Small proportions of focus group discussants (8.0%-13.9%) and key informants (12.5%-31.4%) had previously encountered the campaign materials. Understandability was varied: the use of English and select local languages, combined with high rates of illiteracy, meant that some were not able to understand the campaign. The capacity for people to act on the messages was extremely limited: inaccessibility, unavailability, and unaffordability of quality-assured medicines from official sources, as well as illiteracy, constrained what people could realistically do in response to the campaign. Importantly, reach, understandability, and capacity to respond were especially limited amongst marginalized groups, who are already at greatest risk of exposure to SF products. These findings suggest that there may be potential for public education campaigns to help combat the issue of SF medicines through prevention, but that the impact of public education is likely to be limited and may even inadvertently widen health inequities. This indicates that public education campaigns are not a single solution; they can only be properly effective if accompanied by health system strengthening and supply-side interventions that aim to increase the effectiveness of regulation. [Abstract copyright: © The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.]
Wagnild, J. M., Owusu, S. A., Mariwah, S., Kolo, V. I., Vandi, A., Namanya, D. B., Kuwana, R., Jayeola, B., Prah-Ashun, V., Adeyeye, M. C., Komeh, J., Nahamya, D., & Hampshire, K. (2025). Can public education campaigns equitably counter the use of substandard and falsified (SF) medical products in African countries?. Health Policy and Planning, 40(4), 447-458. https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czaf004
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Jan 14, 2025 |
Online Publication Date | Jan 18, 2025 |
Publication Date | 2025-05 |
Deposit Date | Feb 14, 2025 |
Publicly Available Date | Feb 14, 2025 |
Journal | Health policy and planning |
Print ISSN | 0268-1080 |
Electronic ISSN | 1460-2237 |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 40 |
Issue | 4 |
Pages | 447-458 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czaf004 |
Keywords | Uganda, medicine quality, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, risk communication, Ghana |
Public URL | https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3363903 |
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Published Journal Article
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Publisher Licence URL
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